• On MovieTome: See the TRAILER for TERMINATOR 4!
March 17, 2008 11:31 PM PDT

FriendFeed is not the new Twitter. Is it?

Posted by Rafe Needleman
  • Print

FriendFeed: Taunting me with useful new features.

Like my new boss, I am getting an increasing flow of bacn notices about people subscribing to my FriendFeed updates.

Many pundits, in the same boat, are wondering whether FriendFeed is the new Twitter since it serves a similar purpose: it tells you what your pals are up to. And it has the easiest and best procedure for finding and subscribing to your friends' feeds of any social-network app I've ever seen.

On Monday, the company added a handy new feature: search. This is a bit of a bigger deal that it appears at first. It's not just an incremental new feature for FriendFeed users. It actually makes the site a useful search engine--if what you're searching for is something a friend did or wrote. Like the still-unreleased Delver, this tool lets you search among items only from network of friends, ignoring the chaff on the rest of the Web.

Although the search feature is a good addition, I am still not enthralled by FriendFeed. It's not that I don't like reading updates on it. That's cool. But I cannot reasonably expect that everyone I'm currently following elsewhere will jump into FriendFeed; in fact, FriendFeed still can't natively read Facebook updates. Let's call this effect Social Network Switching Decay.

Using FriendFeed instead of, say, Twitter, is not an option thanks to switching decay and also because FriendFeed can only read from social services, not write to them (for now, anyway)--yet using it in addition to Twitter is duplicative and annoying.

I can't ignore FriendFeed entirely because of its insidious comment feature: people can leave a comment on FriendFeed in response to any item it picks up. So if I post a Twitter item or a Flickr photo, now I have to check the original sources as well as FriendFeed to see what people are saying back to me.

In sum, FriendFeed balances useful and annoying better than any app ever I've seen.

See also: Plaxo, Iminta, and a new one: OneSwirl. Previous coverage: FriendFeed tells you what your friends are up to online.

Rafe Needleman writes about start-ups, new technologies, and Web 2.0 products, as editor of CNET's Webware. E-mail Rafe.
Recent posts from Webware
Music and browsing take flight in Songbird
BlackBerry's mobile Web site gets a refresh
Zagat on iPhone: 'A disappointment' die-hards will still 'love'
Facebook Marketplace relaunch powered by Oodle
Gmail comes to the desktop in gadget form
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 2 comments
by andrew.mager March 18, 2008 4:24 PM PDT
FriendFeed is probably the best social media aggregator. I agree that it's not useful right now though.

They do have an amazing Facebook app though. I usually never install apps, but this one has been on my profile for a while. It lets my Facebook friends see my other services.
Reply to this comment
by TroyJMorris March 24, 2008 2:31 PM PDT
I'm falling in love with FriendFeed. Sure, none of my friends are using it but when they do, I'll be ready.

It's incredibly easy to use and it's so passive. I just go about my business and it's all aggregated for my stalkers. Twitter aggregation can give the detail and the everything else just let's people know what I cared about that day. It's like a TroyJMorris auto-bulletin board - sans my extra-effort.
Reply to this comment
advertisement
Click Here

About Webware

Say No to boxed software! The future of applications is online delivery and access. Software is passé. Webware is the new way to get things done.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Webware topics

In the news now

A tech veteran responds to the recession

LogLogic's Patricia Sueltz heard a clear message about the economy from investors, but she already knows a thing or two about navigating through tough times.


Obama's AG pick on privacy

Eric Holder has criticized the warrantless wiretapping program, but his views on other online policies may not be that far from those of the Bush administration.


advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right